Abstract
Evolution of microstructure and hardness in quenched ultrahigh carbon steel Fe-0.85Mo-0.6Si-1.4C by warm compression on a Bähr plastometer-dilatometer at 775 °C and at 0.001 to 1 s−1 strain rate range is reported. The material was prepared via powder metallurgy: cold pressing and liquid phase sintering. Independent of strain rate, the initial martenstic microstruc-ture was transformed to ferrite and spheroidized cementite. Strain rate had an effect on size and shape of spheroidized Fe3C precipitates: the higher the strain rate, the smaller the precipitates. Morphology of the spheroidized carbides influenced hardness, with the highest hardness, 362 HV10, for strain rate 1 s−1 and the lowest, 295 HV10, for the lowest strain rate 0.001 s−1. Resultant microstructure and ambient temperature mechanical properties were comparable to those of the material that had undergone a fully spheroidizing treatment with increased time and energy con-sumption, indicating that it can be dispensed with in industrial processing. All our results are con-sistent with the Hall–Petch relation developed for spheroidized steels.
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Nikiel, P., Szczepanik, S., & Korpała, G. (2021). Accelerated spheroidization of cementite in sintered ultrahigh carbon steel by warm deformation. Metals, 11(2), 1–12. https://doi.org/10.3390/met11020328
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